Veterinary Guide to Canine Hypocalcemia (2025) 🐶🩺

In this article
Veterinary Guide to Canine Hypocalcemia (2025) 🐶🩺
By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc
🧬 What Is Hypocalcemia?
Hypocalcemia occurs when blood calcium falls below normal (<7 mg/dL total or ionized <0.8 mmol/L), disrupting neuromuscular, cardiovascular, and neurologic function.
👥 Which Dogs Are Affected?
- Nursing females (eclampsia/puerperal tetany), especially small breeds & large litters.
- Any dog with kidney disease, pancreatitis, alkalosis, oxalate poisoning, or following thyroid/parathyroid removal.
- Dogs with hypoparathyroidism—immune‑mediated or post‑surgical.
- Critical illness, transfusions with citrate, or nutritional imbalances may also trigger hypocalcemia.
⚠️ Clinical Signs
- Early: panting, agitation, facial rubbing, stiffness.
- Neuromuscular: tremors, twitching, stiff gait, ataxia.
- Severe: seizures, tetany, collapse.
- Cardiovascular: hypotension, arrhythmias, bradycardia.
- Other signs: vomiting, weakness, fever, increased thirst/urination.
🔍 Diagnostic Work-Up
- Clinical exam & history: focus on breeding status, recent surgery, toxicoses, nutrition.
- Blood tests: measure total & ionized calcium, kidney/liver panels, phosphorus, magnesium, albumin.
- PTH & vitamin D levels: essential to diagnose hypoparathyroidism.
- EKG & ECG: monitor for arrhythmias and changes due to calcium deficit.
- Further tests: ethylene glycol, oxalate panel, acid-base status, imaging for pancreatitis or renal disease.
- Repeat testing: confirm low calcium, rule out lab error.
🛠️ Emergency Treatment
- IV calcium gluconate: slow infusion under monitoring to reverse life‑threatening signs.
- Supportive care: IV fluids, manage electrolytes, control seizure activity, regulate temperature.
- Monitor: EKG, blood pressure, and calcium levels during acute management.
🔄 Long-Term Management
- Eclampsia: taper to oral calcium + vitamin D, wean puppies, repeat breeding caution.
- Hypoparathyroidism: lifelong calcitriol & calcium supplementation, monitor serum monthly.
- Kidney/pancreatitis: treat underlying condition, correct Ca with diet & Ph control.
- Toxin-related (ethylene glycol, citrate): treat the toxin and supplement until resolved.
- Nutrition-based: ensure dietary calcium and vitamin D balance.
📈 Prognosis
- Good to excellent when promptly treated—most canine hypocalcemia recover fully.
- Eclampsia cases recover quickly, but may recur with future pregnancies.
- Hypoparathyroidism requires lifelong therapy; renal or chronic conditions carry more guarded prognosis.
- Critical illness-related cases may need extended ICU stay but often recover.
📱 Ask A Vet Telehealth Integration
- 📸 Rapid upload of labs, EKGs, and clinical signs for specialist consultation.
- 🔔 Treatment reminders: calcium dosing, vitamin D, and rechecks.
- 🩺 Virtual vitals check-ins and seizure monitoring.
🎓 Case Spotlight: “Molly” the Chihuahua Mum
Molly, a nursing Chihuahua with a six‑pup litter, became restless, trembled, and collapsed at 3 weeks post-whelping. Labs showed ionized Ca 0.6 mmol/L. She received IV calcium gluconate, then transitioned to oral calcium + vitamin D; puppies were pup‑reared temporarily. Ask A Vet coordinated dosing reminders, supplement delivery, and telehealth monitoring. Molly’s calcium normalized in 48 hours, and she fully recovered 🐾.
🔚 Key Takeaways
- Hypocalcemia can result from eclampsia, hypoparathyroidism, renal disease, toxins, or nutritional imbalances.
- Watch for tremors, stiff gait, seizures, arrhythmias, especially in at‑risk dogs.
- Diagnosis relies on ionized calcium, PTH, kidney/pancreas/toxin evaluation.
- Emergency treatment includes IV calcium and supportive care; long‑term management tailored to cause.
- Ask A Vet telehealth offers rapid assessment, treatment coordination, remote monitoring, and supplement delivery for optimal outcomes 📲🐕
Dr Duncan Houston BVSc, founder of Ask A Vet. Download the Ask A Vet app to protect your dog from hypocalcemia—offering lab reviews, emergency guidance, dosing reminders, supplement delivery, and long-term calcium monitoring 🐶📲